This blog is for Darren, for our family and friends, and for hope. Darren has kidney failure and has been back on dialysis for almost 5 years. As the days, months and years have passed we hoped for another transplant to come along. But like 80,000 others, we wait on a seemingly endless list. As I look at my beautiful daughter that in every way resembles her father, I realize that I can't fall short of doing everything I can. This is my blog of unfiltered hope.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Perils of the National Waiting List

Every day at about 3:30 I get a Google News email listing all the articles related to "kidneys" that come across the internet that day. Lately there have been a lot of articles about living donors (daughter gives to Mother, friend gives to friend, woman gives to My Space acquaintance...etc.) which is really wonderful. (And apparently there is a trouble making soccer player by the name of Kidney in England that I get to follow as well.)

However, there is also a lot of sobering news. I came across the below article this week in the LA Times, which I thought was worth passing along. The statistics don't surprise me when I see the difference between the amount of people waiting for a kidney on the national waiting list (80,000) and the amount that actually receive transplants each year from that list (less than 10,000). With 400,000 people on dialysis now in the US and the projection being more than 2 million by 2030, the realities are truly sobering. It really drives home the importance of being an organ donor. If more people educated themselves, checked that box on their drivers license and made their wishes known to family...these statistics could change.

The shortage of donor organs has been a problem for many years, and it isn't getting any better. A study published today found that 46% of patients age 60 and older currently on the waiting list for a kidney transplant will die before receiving an organ from a deceased donor. The study is published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

People in search of a kidney may have better luck trying to find a living donor -- someone who will give up one of their two kidneys.

"We have now reached a notable benchmark in which nearly half of newly listed older candidates will not survive the interval to receive a deceased donor transplant," the lead author of the study, Jesse D. Schold, said in a news release. "Our results emphasize the particular need to consider living donation as an alternative source for some older patients -- or alternatively, the critical importance of navigating the steps to receive a deceased donor transplant as rapidly as possible."

Schold, an associate instructor of medicine at the University of Florida, analyzed data on nearly 55,000 patients over age 60 who were on the U.S. waiting list for a kidney transplant from 1995 to 2007. Patients age 70 and older and African Americans were even more likely to die before receiving a kidney. Besides age, factors such as blood type and being on dialysis at the time of listing also affected the odds of receiving a transplant. The study also found wide variations in regions of the country.

The number of people who need kidneys is increasing while the number of donors has remained stable. That means time on the waiting list has grown and more people die. Only certain patients are viable organ donors at the time of death. While many family members consent to donation, an astonishing number of Americans refuse to offer what has been called "the gift of life."

Information on being a donor

If you are blood type B or O (+ or -) and are interested in finding out if you could be a kidney donor for Darren, contact Virginia Mason Transplant Center at 1-800-354-9527 ext. 11201 to talk to the Donor Advocate and request a Donor packet.